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Dogs and Cats without a ‘Pet Passport' Will Be Denied Entry To These Countries
Travel + Leisure has rounded up the latest information and guidance to keep your four-legged friends safe and comfortable before taking off.
Taking a road trip or a flight across state lines can trigger additional documentation and legal implications for pets and their owners. While a "pet passport" isn't explicitly required, some states require a certificate of health from a licensed veterinarian.
For travelers heading on a journey with their pet for the first time, one of the best resources is a lesser-known website within the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. There, travelers can explore the recently-updated Travel with a Pet page that features the latest state guidance. For example, if you bring a dog or cat into the state of Texas, it must be vaccinated against rabies.
The USDA also recommends scheduling a visit with a veterinarian who can verify the pet's health, provide necessary documentation, and specific state or country-by-country recommendations.
Travelers heading from the U.S. to a county within the European Union with pets (such as France or Italy) are required to obtain documentation verifying the health of the pet, including vaccination against rabies and other diseases, along with identity information, the European Commission noted. For travelers within the U.S., these can be obtained through authorized veterinarians. The certificate must be dated no more than ten days in advance of entering into the EU, and has a four month lifespan. There are other rules such as a declaration that the pet's entrance to the EU is for "non-commercial" purposes only, and not for a commercial reason like being sold to a different owner.
Travelers should carefully review the entry requirements as the repercussions for not following the rules could end in tragedy.
'If your pet fails these compliance checks, it may be returned to the country of departure, be placed in quarantine until such time as it complies with EU health rules or if neither of these options are possible, the animal may be euthanised,' the EU's website states.
Individual countries maintain different regulations and processes for pets. In Mexico, for example, animals are not required to have a "pet passport," but are frequently inspected upon arrival for any disease or wounds. However, on the flight back to the United States, dogs are required to undergo screwworm testing to verify they are free of the disease.
"As of November 22, 2024, Mexico is considered to be affected by screwworm. All dogs (including U.S. origin dogs returning to the U.S. after traveling to Mexico) must meet APHIS requirements for screwworm freedom certification upon entry (re-entry)," the USDA explains on its website.
Airlines have dedicated policies and procedures when traveling either domestically or internationally with a certified service animal. These animals are "individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of a qualified individual with a disability, including a physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual, or other mental disability," according to the Department of Transportation. But airlines may require documentation on the animal's health, behavior, and training.
Emotional support animals are not considered official service animals.
Travelers should contact their airline in advance of their booking to verify the documentation and have the pet added to the reservation, if required.
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San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
This 250th anniversary in San Francisco will probably pass in silence
Tuesday is the 250th anniversary of a sea voyage that went down in history. Not long before dark on a windy and cold afternoon, Aug. 5, 1775, the Royal Spanish Navy ship San Carlos entered the harbor of San Francisco Bay and anchored for the night just off the beach at what is now the Presidio. As far as anyone knows, the San Carlos was the first ship to enter San Francisco Bay. The arrival of the San Carlos set off a whole series of events. Once the Spanish found out the extent and potential of the area, they decided to send a party of colonists the very next year; they arrived in the spring of 1776. It was the beginning of San Francisco and the end of a way of life for people who had lived around the bay for thousands of years. Two hundred fifty years is a big milestone, but any story about exploration comes with baggage: colonialism and the fatal impact of European contact on native peoples. So there will be no celebration of this anniversary as far as I know. But any voyage into the unknown has a certain fascination. As a kid I devoured stories about explorers: Robert Scott in the Antarctic, Roald Amundsen on the Northwest Passage. I just finished 'The Wide Wide Sea,' Hampton Sides' book on Capt. James Cook. I never outgrew these tales. So the voyage of the San Carlos to San Francisco was a natural. The commander of the San Carlos, Teniente de Fragata (Frigate Lt.) Juan Manuel de Ayala, kept a careful log of the voyage, and it's preserved in the Council of the Indies in Madrid. The Spanish descriptions are so clear you can visit the locations Ayala wrote about. You can take a ferry to Angel Island to the cove where the San Carlos anchored for a month, or sail to Vallejo up the wide bay the Spanish named for St. Paul. Just the other day I drove to the little beach at the edge of the Presidio where the San Carlos anchored that first night in San Francisco Bay in 132 feet of water with a sandy bottom. The spot is not far from what we call the Golden Gate. It's part of a national park, popular with joggers and dog walkers. Ayala anchored the ship a quarter-mile from the beach, but Ayala didn't like the look of it: too windy, too much current, whirlpools and riptides. So in the morning he moved across the bay to Marin to a place he called Carmelita, out of the wind. You can stand on that little San Francisco beach and see that cross bay trip in your mind's eye. But the bottom was soft on the north side, and that wouldn't do either. Ayala feared losing the anchor in the mud. Ayala's chief mate and pilot, José de Cañizares, had scouted a cove on the bay's biggest island, not far away, and Ayala eventually took the ship there. As it was near her feast day, the island was named for Our Lady, Queen of the Angels — Angel Island. Another island was found to be inhospitable, with steep cliffs and hundreds of pelicans. Alcatraz. Ayala sent Cañizares, the pilot, with 10 men in a launch to explore and chart the bay. They went north and east taking soundings and mapping the shore. They went as far as Carquinez Strait, which they named for the Karquin people they met, and into Suisun Bay. Another pilot, Juan Aguirre, went south toward what became San Jose. The chart they made became the first accurate map of the bay region. Juan Manuel de Ayala was born in Andalusia and was a graduate of the Spanish naval academy. By the time he was assigned to Mexico he was 29, and after 15 years in the service was still a lieutenant. But he had a good reputation and was one of five officers hand picked by the viceroy to explore the north coast on three ships. The Spanish knew about San Francisco Bay and wanted more information. Ayala must have been disappointed when he got to San Blas, a small base near Puerto Vallarta, to be given command of the schooner Sonora, only 36 feet long and designed for inshore work. The Sonora and two other ships sailed from San Blas on the afternoon of March 21,1775, the first day of spring. There was trouble. The San Carlos, a two-masted packet boat that was the largest in the fleet, hoisted a signal. The captain, Diego Manrique, a senior lieutenant, was sick 'and unable to continue the voyage.' He'd had a mental breakdown. He became paranoid, convinced himself that persons unknown were after him. He stashed loaded pistols all over the ship. The fleet commander relieved Manrique and picked Ayala to replace him. On April 4, when the fleet was near the Port of Mazatlan, one of the pistols the unfortunate former captain had hidden away went off and shot Ayala in the foot. Ayala was so badly hurt he couldn't walk. This was in 1775, and one can only imagine the medical help available on a ship at sea. Mazatlan was not far away and Ayala could have turned back. But this was his chance — an independent command with orders to go to the uncharted port of San Francisco. So, disabled as he was, he stayed in command. The voyage was long and tedious; the San Carlos was very slow, especially when sailing against the wind and in the heavy coastal fog. It took from early April to late June to sail from Cabo San Lucas at the tip of Baja California, to Monterey, where they stopped for repairs, and nearly a week from Monterey to the Gulf of the Farallones. At sunrise on Aug. 5, the ship was at 36 degrees 42 minutes north latitude and Ayala could see what we now call the Golden Gate. The rest was history. The arrival of the San Carlos was not the first contact between the people of the Bay Area and Europeans. An expedition led by Gaspar de Portolá first sighted the bay in the fall of 1769. In 1772, another expedition, this one headed by army Capt. Pedro Fages, explored the eastern side of the bay. They calculated the latitude of the entrance to the estuary. A gap in the coastal hills looked to them like 'a gate.' Three years later, Ayala knew where to sail. The Spanish sailors found the local people 'affable and hospitable.' They came aboard the ship and invited the foreigners to their camps. They offered food and small gifts. Padre Vicente Santa Maria was quite taken with what he called 'the heathens' and tried to learn their language and culture. The voyage of the San Carlos did not create the historic drama that followed, but it set the stage. On one of his exploring trips, the pilot Aguirre came upon a little cove. On the shore were three people, weeping uncontrollably. He couldn't understand the reason for the tears, but he called it ' La Ensenada de los llorones ' — the cove of the weepers. Today it's called Mission Bay, San Francisco's newest neighborhood.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
China's hottest place: Temperatures hit over 140°F in China's Flaming Mountains
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Forbes
4 hours ago
- Forbes
The Best Beauty Essentials For Summer Travel
Phlur, Nip+Fab, Ipsum, Pelegrims, Eco by Sonya, Josh Wood Colour Phlur, Nip+Fab, Ipsum, Pelegrims, Eco by Sonya, Josh Wood Colour Whether you're beach bound or city hopping, summer calls for a streamlined beauty lineup that works hard and packs light. 'As a travel writer, I'm on the road a lot for work, and I'm always trying to pack as light as possible,' says Emma Weissmann, Executive Editor of TravelAge West. 'I'm also a makeup minimalist who gets overwhelmed with the number of products on the market. Subtl [custom stackable makeup] has been a game-changer for me. I took a quiz to find out what colors might look best with my skin tone and then customized my stack so that it has concealer, bronzer, highlighter and a lip/cheek combo. I only pack two additional products—foundation and mascara—to round out my routine, and I've gotten so many compliments on my makeup. Now, my stack just lives in my suitcase and comes with me everywhere, and it has cost me so much less than if I were to buy separate, full-size products.' Ipsum's beautifully scented Best Skin Replenishing Mist is a savior on long flights. Hailing from Australia, Ipsum is a certified organic skincare line that harnesses native botanicals, and the brand's Replenishing Mist delivers ultra-fine hydration via plant-sourced hyaluronic acid and vitamin C–rich native plums. It's also packed with Australian Fragonia essential oil, which is believed to support the parasympathetic nervous system, which could help re-regulate circadian rhythm and ease jet-lag symptoms. Eco by Sonya Glory Veil Eco by Sonya Keeping with the Australian theme, Eco by Sonya is an Australian clean beauty brand founded by eco-beautician Sonya Driver and specializing in reef-safe, organic skincare. The brand's body sunscreen will not budge, making it perfect for long beach days. It's a mineral-based, broad-spectrum SPF that protects against UVA and UVB but is also free from chemicals and fragrance. 'Le Balm is a little pot of gold,' says beauty writer Brianna Peters. 'It's a French, do-it-all salve that works as a serum, moisturizer, balm, eye cream, lip treatment and more. I put it all over my clean face, under my nostrils (to help keep my nose from drying out), on my lips and cuticles, and it replenishes my skin against the moisture-stripping plane air. It leaves my skin with the most beautiful, ethereal glow when I land—so much so that I've gotten compliments from strangers.' Naked Sundays Water Gel SPF Naked Sundays Naked Sundays - CabanaClear Water Gel Serum SPF 50 For face SPF, the summer go-to has to be Naked Sundays. The Australian brand's CabanaClear Water Gel Serum SPF 50 is a cutting-edge hydrating gel with broad-spectrum sun protection. It's light as air and completely clear (no white cast), plus it's extra hydrating with hyaluronic acid, kakadu plum and vitamin E. The product gets bonus points for being fast absorbing, making it a great under-makeup base on hot, sunny travel days. Nip+Fab's Tone & Top Up SPF50 One last entry in the sunscreen category: an over-makeup mist that does it all. 'We're told time and time again how important it is to top up your SPF throughout the day, but unless you want to remove and reapply your makeup, it's kind of impossible,' says freelance beauty editor Lucy Partington. 'That's exactly where an over-makeup mist comes in nicely. Nip+Fab's Tone & Top Up SPF50 spray is lightweight and hydrating, making it perfect to spritz on throughout the day. It combines a blend of skin-boosting ingredients alongside broad spectrum UV defence to leave skin both glowy and protected. One thing to note is that this shouldn't replace your usual sunscreen—still apply that in the morning—and keep this one in your bag for easy, on-the-go reapplication.' Dr. David Jack Clinic-Carry On Led by aesthetics doctor David Jack, this skincare line focuses on clean, clinically tested formulations. The Clinic-Carry On kit is a cure-all travel kit that includes essentials like lipid-repair moisturizers in compact sizes tailored for air travel and climate changes. It's curated to combat dehydration, redness and UV exposure in one portable package, all products are small enough to clear TSA checks with ease. Tołpa - Dermo Face Lipidrio Cream-Oil Polish dermo-cosmetic brand Tołpa specializes in skincare for sensitive and dry skin, and their Cream-Oil is a nighttime must while on vacation. The cream transforms into a nourishing oil upon application and is deeply moisturizing, smoothing roughness and accelerating overnight repair. It's a nighttime summer rescue for skin exposed to sun and salt. Bioeffect Imprinting Eye Masks Another pick from beauty writer Brianna Peters: Bioeffect Imprinting Eye Masks. 'These eye gel masks are a cooling, calming, de-puffing and hydrating airplane must, ' she says. 'They're brilliant on their own but when supercharged with the brand's eye serum (made with a special growth factor complex from Iceland), the results are even more impressive. Right before landing, I apply a few drops of the silky serum under my eyes (it comes in the most brilliant roller-ball format so it's mess-free) and follow with the eye gels on top. I leave it on for about 10 minutes to soak up all the nourishing goodness. As someone with sensitive eyes and major dark circles, it's like a magic eraser for dullness and puffiness. Plus, they're totally translucent so you don't look totally crazy to other passengers.' Dr. Sebagh - Pure Vitamin C Powder Cream Founded by skincare expert Dr. Jean-Louis Sebagh in the UK, this namesake brand is known for medical-grade, high-performance treatments. The award-winning Pure Vitamin C Powder Cream delivers a stabilized, potent form of vitamin C in powder form that transforms into a light cream on contact to brighten dull, sun-exposed skin and neutralize free radicals. The non-liquid, small sachets make for easy transport. Got2b - GetFresh Dry Shampoo Created by Schwarzkopf's Got2b brand, this is a dry shampoo spray in a fine mist format. It refreshes roots using rice starch to absorb oil and impurities, with a light bergamot and freesia scent (the ingredients are 99% naturally derived). Great for after a flight, it revives limp and greasy hair instantly. Josh Wood Colour - Miracle Hair Oil Josh Wood London is a UK-based salon brand founded by celebrity colorist Josh Wood. The Miracle Hair Oil in 30-milliliter travel size is a lightweight 5-in-1 oil blend containing kukui nut, babassu and pracaxi oils, alongside quinoa extract and green walnut. Advanced UV filters are designed to protect the hair from UV and pollution while also preserving color vibrancy. It's ideal for moisturizing hair post-swim, while defending against UV-induced fading. Pelegrims - Grape Leaf Sheet Mask Created by the boutique skincare brand Pelegrims, these botanical sheet masks are formulated with English grape extract sourced from Westwell vineyard in Kent, England. Intensely hydrating and soothing, the mask are perfect for use on a long flight (they're not too drippy or sticky) or after sun exposure to cool and replenish moisture to irritated skin. Aegean Beauty Aegean Beauty Aegean Beauty - Solid Body Butter Aegean Beauty is a Greek brand from Syros, featuring locally sourced ingredients and supporting local producers. The solid Body Butter is rich yet compact, providing deep hydration from natural botanicals. The balm-like texture melts onto sun-parched skin, while the lemony scent uplifts. Bon Charge - Red Light Face Wand Bon Charge is a science-wellness brand offering tech-based beauty and recovery devices. The ultra-portable Red Light Face Wand uses near-infrared and red light LEDs to stimulate collagen, reduce fine lines and improve tone and texture. It's lightweight, easy to pack, chargeable with a USB cord and only requires 5 to 10-minute sessions per day, making it very travel friendly. The Natural Africa The Natural Africa The Natural Africa - Cape Aloe Serum Aloe is essential for any sunny holiday and South African brand The Natural Africa has the perfect formula in their Cape Aloe Serum. A blend of sustainably sourced Aloe Ferox juice, Devil's Claw, rose geranium, grapefruit oils and hyaluronic acid, the serum is deeply hydrating with potent antioxidants. Phlur - Beach Skin Hair & Body Mist Having a viral moment this summer, Phlur's Beach Skin is a dreamy body mist that captures the very essence of summer in its scent and light-as-air texture that works on both the body and the hair. Expect notes of sea salt, bergamot and coconut milk against a warm base of vanilla, sandalwood and musk. It's a vacation in a bottle.